Savings Bank v. Creswell

100 U.S. 630, 25 L. Ed. 713, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1860
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1880
Docket161
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 100 U.S. 630 (Savings Bank v. Creswell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Savings Bank v. Creswell, 100 U.S. 630, 25 L. Ed. 713, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1860 (1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

Samuel P. Brown, being seised in fee of a large number of lots constituting the subdivision of a tract of land into the town of Mount Pleasant, had a judgment rendered against him, March 3, 1870, in favor of one Jolly, for the simi of $4,694.05, in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, and the lots being within the District, the judgment became from that day a lien on them. On the twentieth day of June of that year, Mr. Brown borrowed of the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company the sum of $10,000, and executed to Daniel L. Eaton a deed of trust conveying a part of the lots owned by him in Mount Pleasant, as security for the repayment of the loan. Under this deed of trust the lots were sold and bought in for the Freedman’s Bank, and they have resold several of them and guaranteed the title to the purchasers.

A few months after the execution of the deed of trust above mentioned by Brown, he began to borrow money from the National Savings Bank, the appellant in this case, and gave deeds of trust on other lots in the same subdivision to secure the payment of these loans. In July, 1874, the National Savings Bank, fearing the loss of their security by the judgment against Brown of March 3, 1870,- purchased that judgment, and ordered an execution to be issued on it, which was levied on the lots conveyed to Eaton for the benefit of the Freedman’s Bank, That bank having passed into the .control of Creswell and others, as commissioners appointed to wind up its affairs, they brought the present bill in chancery to release those lots from sale under that execution.

The court granted such relief as is authorized by the principle that where real estate is subjected to a lien in the hands of its owner, and he sells or mortgages separate parcels of that property subsequently to different persons, and at different *639 times, these .parcels shall be' subjected to payment of the lien in the inverse order of their alienation.

The facts show that the conveyances to secure the savings bank were made subsequently to that made to secure the Freedman’s Bank, and if the rule we have mentioned be a sound one, and there be no special reason to exempt this case from its operation, the Freedman’s Bank was entitled to have the lots conveyed to the savings bank applied to the extent of their value in payment of the judgment, before their lots could be subjected to that payment.

There are one or two matters relied on by appellant to take this case out of the rule.

1. It is said that appellant had no actual notice of the deed of trust to Eaton when it took its mortgages, and a large part of the argument of counsel is devoted to this subject. But it does not appear that appellant in its answer set up the defence of a bona fide purchaser without notice, nor that any such question Avas raised in the court below. The main foundation of the suggestion, hoAvever, namely, that there is no evidence that the deed to Eaton was recorded, Avhich appeared to be so by tlje transcript, is removed by the production of the original deed, having on it the certificate of the register of deeds, that it was properly recorded. This removes the foundation of the argument, and it must fail.

Another objection is that the appellant sets out in its answer that other persons had bought lots of Brown, after the rendition of the judgment, and Avere proper parties to'this suit, and that as the complainants failed to bring them before the court, the decree in their favor is erroneous, and must be reversed for that reason.

But while the answer says that, as the appellant is informed and believes, there was a considerable amount of other property than that described in the bill, owned by said BroAvn, and subject to the lien of the judgment, which was sold and conveyed by him after his conveyance to secure the debt of the appellant, it does not describe the property or name the purchasers or fix the date of their purchases.

As the purchases are said to be subsequent to the creation of appellant’s lien, it was the interest of appellant to set out the *640 facts necessary to enable tbe complainants to bring them before the court. Nothing in the decree as rendered prevents defendant from selling these lots under, his execution. The complainants, therefore, were not bound to hunt up the parties and the transactions to which appellant merely alludes in such vague and indefinite terms.

Lastly, the appellant argues that the subjection of the property covered by the lien of the judgment to its satisfaction, in the inverse order of its alienation, is not the prevailing rule in courts of equity, nor the rule of property in the District of Columbia.

Though the attention of counsel was directed during the argument to the production of any authoritative, decision of the courts of the District or of Maryland which would be conclusive of the question, none could be found, after several days’ opportunity for examination. The decree before us must rest on the general equity doctrine, if it be sustained at all.

The question is also a new one . in this court, for Orvis v. Powell (98 U. S. 176) was decided on the ground that the principle having become a rule of property in Illinois, would be followed by us in reference to lands in that State. And Hughes v. Edwards (9 Wheat. 490) does not raise the question before us now, much less decide it. That was merely a question whether improvements constructed on the land after the execution of the mortgage became subject to-..its operation.

The proposition we are called on to consider is one on which the authorities, though numerous, are by no means in harmony. Mr. Justice Story, in his work on Equity (vol. ii. sect. 1283 5), approves the rule, so far as any of the property subject to the lien remains in the hands of the party against whom the lien was first established, but he says there is great reason to doubt whether it can be applied as between subsequent purchasers from that party, when it has been alienated at different times And to several persons. “ On the contrary,” he says, in such case “ there seems strong ground to contend that the original incumbrance or lien ought to be borne ratably between them, according to the relative value of the estates. And so the doc-. *641 trine has been asserted in the ancient as well as the modern English cases on the subject.”

The older cases cited for this proposition scarcely sustain it: In Sir William Herbert's Case (3 Coke, 11), it was resolved that “ if A. be seised of three acres, and acknowledge a recognizance or statute, and enfeoff B. of one acre, and O. of another acre, and the third descends to his heir, and if execution be sued out against the heir he shall not have contribution against the purchasers, for the heir sits in the seat of his ancestor.” Among them is also Lanoy v. The Duke and Duchess of Athol (2 Atk.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 U.S. 630, 25 L. Ed. 713, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savings-bank-v-creswell-scotus-1880.